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Media Reform
For Immediate Release:
2009-09-22
For More Information:
Brad Ashwell (850) 224-3321 Groups Urge Lawmakers to Support a Broadband Plan that Serves the Public Good
During his Sept 21st, 2009 address in Our report, A Public Interest Internet Agenda
offers lawmakers broadband policy solutions that are tied to the common good
and our prosperity. Connecting every citizen to the Internet at broadband speed
is the key to economic development, improved healthcare and education, energy
efficiency, robust democracy and open government “Broadband access
is crucial to economic, educational and democratic participation in “It’s no accident
that there was $7.2 billion allocated for broadband in the stimulus bill,” said
Nathaniel James, OneWebDay’s Executive Director. “Everyone understands that the
Internet is the pathway to economic opportunity, from educational achievement
to success on the job. Even finding and applying for a job requires online
skills and access.” “Access to the
Internet can help address many of the complex problems that the As lawmakers
formulate a strategy to deliver broadband to every community, this unique and valuable
contribution from public interest advocates should be considered. We recommend
that lawmakers embrace the following core principles: 1. Every
American should have access to Broadband communications. Like
the government’s past efforts to extend telephone coverage there must be
universal and open, non-discriminatory access to high-speed and high-quality
broadband. 2. Good
policy must be well informed.
Policymakers must have access to reliable data on where broadband presently
exists, at what speeds, of what quality, by what provider, how it is used by
consumers, why certain consumers do not use it, and how other consumers
integrate it into their lives. These data must be as granular as possible, and
should be made available in raw form on the Internet for public analysis. 3. Policy
should promote competition, innovation, localism, and opportunity. Locally owned and operated networks
support these familiar core goals of communications policy, and therefore
should receive priority in terms of federal and state support. Structural
separation of ownership of broadband infrastructure from the delivery of
service over that infrastructure will further promote these goals. 4. Government
should use public resources wisely.
Policymakers should seek to leverage the use of resources and assets such as
publicly-owned spectrum, fiber and rights-of-way to achieve the goal of
universal broadband access to the Internet 5. Policy
must stress digital inclusion and the service of traditionally disenfranchised
communities. Stimulating
broadband supply is necessary but not sufficient to achieve the goal of
universal broadband. Policymakers must also promote digital inclusion to
stimulate broadband demand and ensure that all residents have access to the
digital skills and tools necessary to take advantage of the Internet’s enormous
potential benefits in creativity, economic development and civic engagement.
This benefits not just those on the wrong side of the Digital Divide, but all
broadband users and our society. A Public Interest Internet
Agenda has been
endorsed by over 40 local and national public interest organizations that work
on media and telecommunications issues. For more information or to
download a copy of A Public
Interest Internet Agenda, go to www.floridapirg.org -
# # # # - The
Florida Public Interest Research Group (FloridaPIRG) is a non-profit,
non-partisan, public interest advocacy organization. For a copy of the report
and more information visit http://www.floridapirg.org OneWebDay
seeks to build an organization that looks, feels, and works like the Web – a
diverse, decentralized engine of human creativity that delivers value by
pushing power to the edges of its network of organizers and partners. OneWebDay
is an event that highlights the power of the Web and the threats it faces to a
world-wide audience. http://www.onewebday.org The Media and Democracy Coalition (MDC) is a collaboration of more than 30 organizations united to amplify the voices of the public in debates over media and telecommunications policies. http://www.media-democracy.net
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